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title: "Introduction: Unexpected Encounters with Deep Time"
author: Franklin Ginn, Michelle Bastian, David Farrier and Jeremy Kidwell
status: Published
type: published
citation: "&ldquo;Introduction: Unexpected Encounters with Deep Time&rdquo; in <em>Environmental Humanities</em>, vol. 10, iss. 1, May 2018, pp. 213-225"
tag: deep-time
subjects: deep-time
comments: no
file: 213ginn.pdf
date: 2018-06-25
publishdate: 2018-05-01
doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/22011919-4385534
---
The fractured timespace of the Anthropocene brings distant pasts and futures into the present. Thinking about deep time is challenging: deep time is strange and warps our sense of belonging and our relationships to Earth forces and creatures. The introduction to this special section builds on scholarship in the environmental humanities concerning the ongoing inheritance of biological and geologic processes that stretch back into the deep past as well as the opening up of multiple vistas of the futures. Rather than understanding deep time as an abstract concept, we explore how deep time manifests through places, objects, and practices. Focusing on three modes through which deep time is encountered—enchantment, violence, and haunting—we introduce deep time as an intimate element woven into everyday lives. Deep time stories, we suggest, engage with the productive ways in which deep time reworks questions of narrative, self, and representation. In addressing these dynamics, this introduction and the accompanying articles place current concerns into the larger flows of planetary temporalities, revealing deep time as productive, homely, and wondrous as well as unsettling, uncanny.

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title: "The evolution of Society for Ecological Restorations principles and standards—counter-response to Gann et al"
author: Eric Higgs, Jim Harris, Stephen Murphy, Keith Bowers, Richard Hobbs, Willis Jenkins, Jeremy Kidwell, Nik Lopoukhine, Bethany Sollereder, Katie Suding, Allen Thompson, Steven Whisenant
status: Published
type: published
citation: "&ldquo;The evolution of Society for Ecological Restorations principles and standards—counter-response to Gann et al&rdquo; in <em>Restoration Ecology</em>, vol. 26, no. 3, pp. 431-433, 2018"
tag: restoration-ecology
subjects: restoration-ecology
comments: no
file: Restoration-Ecology-2018-Higgs.pdf
date: 2018-06-02
publishdate: 2018-06-02
doi: https://doi.org/10.1111/rec.12821
---
In response to our recent article (Higgs et al. 2018) in these pages, George Gann and his coauthors defended the Society for Ecological Restoration (SER) International Standards, clari ed several points, and introduced some new perspectives. We offer this counter-response to address some of these perspectives. More than anything, our aims are in sharpening the eld of restoration in a time of rapid scaling-up of interest and effort, and support further constructive dialogue going forward. Our perspective remains that there is an important distinction needed between “Standards” and “Principles” that is largely unheeded by Gann et al. (2018). We encourage SER to consider in future iterations of its senior policy document to lean on principles rst, and then to issue advice on standards that meet the needs of diverse conditions and social, economic, and political realities.